San Diego Union-Tribune

BONHOMME RICHARD BOUND FOR SCRAP YARD

Navy officials rule repairs too costly for assault ship ravaged by five-day fire in July

- BY ANDREW DYER

A fire that raged for almost five days in July has doomed the San Diego-based amphibious assault ship Bonhomme Richard to the scrap yards, Navy officials announced Monday.

The ship will be decommissi­oned within a year and will be scrapped, a Navy official told reporters during a conference call Monday. The cause of the fire is still under investigat­ion.

The cost of repairing the ship was estimated to be between $2.5 billion and $3.2 billion, said Rear Adm. Eric Ver Hage on Monday. The cost and time involved were deemed to be too much by Navy leadership.

“After thorough considerat­ion, the secretary of the Navy and the Chief of Naval Operations have decided to decommissi­on the USS Bonhomme Richard,” said Ver Hage, the commander of Navy Regional Maintenanc­e Center.

The Navy looked at all possible courses of action to “make sure we understood the art of the possible,” Ver Hage said. Officials assessed every space on the ship and Ver Hage said about 60 percent of it — the f light deck, the island and many of the decks immediatel­y below them — would need to be completely replaced.

The Navy looked at three options for the ship — repairing it to full mission-capabiliti­es, refurbishi­ng it as a tender or hospital ship, or decommissi­oning, Ver Hage said.

In addition to the expense, rebuilding the Bonhomme Richard would take five to seven years, Ver Hage said. To reconfigur­e the ship would cost more than $1 billion — more than the cost of building a brand new tender or hospital ship.

Decommissi­oning will cost the Navy about $30 million and will take between nine months and one year, Ver Hage said. He talked of possibly towing it to storage or to shipbreake­rs in the Gulf of Mexico, adding that no contract has been awarded yet.

The decision to decommis

sion the ship was made by Navy leaders just before Thanksgivi­ng, Ver Hage said, and Navy leadership and Congress were briefed on the decision Monday.

The fire on the 844-foot ship docked at Naval Base San Diego began around 8:30 a.m. July 12 — a Sunday — and sent acrid plumes of smoke into the San Diego skies for two days. Temperatur­es topped 1,200 degrees F at the height of the inferno.

By the following Tuesday morning, the smoke plume was noticeably smaller, although the fire smell stayed in neighborho­ods nearest the base for another two days.

An email from the Navy’s top admiral days after the fire revealed the ship had fire, smoke and water damage on 11 of its 14 decks. Some decks were warped and bulging and, in some spaces, completely gutted.

The cause of the blaze remains under investigat­ion, although officials have said the fire began in the ship’s lower vehicle storage area. Arson is suspected. The Naval Criminal Investigat­ive Service searched the home of a Bonhomme Richard sailor in August, according to an ABC 10News report. A San Diego Navy official declined to comment on the sailor or the status of the multiple ongoing investigat­ions Monday.

Early on, Navy leaders left open the possibilit­y of repairing the ship.

“The survivabil­ity of the ship is there — it’s sur vivable,” said Rear Adm. Philip Sobeck, the commander of Expedition­ary Strike Group 3, the day the fire was extinguish­ed. “It’s in stable condition all the way through. The ship can be repaired. Whether or not it will be ... is to be determined.”

Adm. Mike Gilday, the chief of naval operations and the Navy’s top officer, agreed the ship was salvageabl­e at a San Diego news conference the day after the fire was out.

“The question is should we make that investment

into a 22-year-old ship,” he said.

Firefighti­ng crews from 16 San Diego-based ships — more than 400 sailors — assisted federal f iref ighters from bases throughout Southern California around the clock to put down the blaze. Navy helicopter­s from Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron 3 dumped more than 1,500 buckets of water on the ship. Tug boats also shot water onto the ship, cooling its hull.

Commission­ed in 1998, the Bonhomme Richard was in drydock at General Dynamics NASSCO in San Diego last year and has been undergoing further maintenanc­e pier side at Naval Base San Diego. Its last deployment was in 2018.

The ship cost $761 million, according to estimates by the Federation of American Scientists, and was at the end of a two-year, $250 million upgrade to accommodat­e the F-35B fighter. It

is one of a handful of similarly equipped amphibious assault ships.

Defense off icials have been eyeing mini-aircraft carriers like the Bonhomme Richard as a way to keep the newest-generation of fighters continuall­y available in the Pacif ic, as the U.S. counters strategic threats from China.

Amphibious assault ships are used to deploy Marines in amphibious landings. During opera

tions, the ships conduct f light operations with helicopter­s and jet aircraft, such as the AV-8B Harrier and its replacemen­t, the F-35 B Lightning.

The Bonhomme Richard has a crew of roughly 1,000 sailors. Typically, the majority of a ship’s crew will remain on board throughout the decommissi­oning process.

In a statement Monday afternoon, Navy Secretary Kenneth Braithwait­e said

the ship’s legacy will continue through the sailors who fought to save the vessel.

“Although it saddens me that it is not cost effective to bring her back, I know this ship’s legacy will continue to live on through the brave men and women who fought so hard to save her, as well as the Sailors and Marines who served aboard her during her 22-year history,” Braithwait­e said.

 ?? K.C. ALFRED U-T ?? The amphibious assault ship Bonhomme Richard remains docked at Naval Base San Diego. The ship, which caught fire on July 12, will be decommissi­oned within a year and will be scrapped. The cause of the fire is still under investigat­ion.
K.C. ALFRED U-T The amphibious assault ship Bonhomme Richard remains docked at Naval Base San Diego. The ship, which caught fire on July 12, will be decommissi­oned within a year and will be scrapped. The cause of the fire is still under investigat­ion.
 ?? U-T FILE ?? Emergency crews respond to the fire aboard the amphibious assault ship Bonhomme Richard on July 12 at Naval Base San Diego.
U-T FILE Emergency crews respond to the fire aboard the amphibious assault ship Bonhomme Richard on July 12 at Naval Base San Diego.

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